Device and method for evaluating signals of load cells with strain gauges

ABSTRACT

A device and a method for evaluating signals from load cells with strain gauges (SG), which require electronic signal evaluation with very low offset voltages due to the small output signal. In order to be able to use inexpensive components as well, two different operating points of the SG are set in two consecutive measurements, each being determined by a single voltage reference. The voltage in the zero branch of the bridge circuit of the SG is amplified in a differential amplifier and digitised with an ADC. In this context, the reference for the ADC is derived from the operating point of the SG that is determined by the respective voltage reference. The digitised offset and the initial value of the load cell are calculated from the two measurement values in an arithmetic logic unit.

The invention relates to a device and a method for evaluating signals from load cells with strain gauges.

Most modern electromechanical scales work either according to the principle of electromagnetic force compensation or with load cells, which in turn work with strain gauges (SG). The electrical resistance in strain gauges changes even with very small displacements. They are stuck with special adhesive to components that undergo minimal deformation under load. Strain gauges can be used to manufacture scales of all sizes, from domestic scales to crane scales. For example, DE 3538178 A1 describes a bathroom scales for measuring bodyweight. DE 10135238 A1 describes scales for food, and DE 102008014838 B3 relates to a dispensing monitoring device for coffee machines. This device functions according to the same principle as the scales described in DE 19838371 C2 with one or more load cells. When multiple load cells are used, the signals therefrom are added together in a signal processing device. The load cells are constructed as leaf springs, to which the SG are glued.

DE 20023524 U1 describes a force measuring element for a scales that consists of a bar with two recesses. The reduced cross sections create two bending points, between which a parallel guide is formed when a load is applied to the ends of the bar. The measurement signal from the force measuring element is derived from an SG that is glued to the upper side of the bar. Four of these force measuring elements, which are connected to form a Wheatstone bridge, make up the load cells of the scales.

Under load, the SG are extended or compressed, causing a change in the electrical resistance thereof. This in turn alters the voltage state in the zero branch of the bridge circuit, which is amplified and displayed with a needle instrument, for example. Besides this purely analogue display, the amplified voltage state is also digitised in an analogue/digital converter (ADC), conditioned with a digital signal processor and displayed with a signal output, as described in DE 102008014838 B3, for example.

A disadvantage of the scales described is that, since the output signal of the load cells is so small, typically in the order of 2 mV per Volt input terminal voltage, high-performance and thus also expensive amplifier circuits must be used. Alternatively, ADCs with very high resolution may also be used when the signal is digitised. But these are also not available at the low end of the market.

The object underlying the invention is therefore to enable high-resolution load cell evaluation with inexpensive components.

This object is solved with a device having the features of claim 1 and a method having the features of claim 9, wherein two different operating points of the SG are set for two consecutive measurements. The voltage in the zero branch of the bridge circuit of the SG is amplified in a differential amplifier and digitised using an ADC. In this context, the same voltage references are used for the ADC and to set the operating point of the SG. The digitised offset and the initial value of the load cell are calculated from the two measurement values in an arithmetic logic unit.

The advantages gained with the invention consist particularly in that the temperature-dependent offset voltages are compensated by simple operation amplifiers. One or more load cells may be used in order to increase flexibility.

Further details regarding the invention will be described with reference to the figures:

FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of the evaluation circuit layout including load cell.

FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic illustration of an advantageous refinement of the invention.

FIG. 3 shows a variation of the invention.

FIG. 4 is a diagrammatic illustration of another advantageous refinement of the invention.

FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic illustration of the layout of the evaluation circuit including the load cell. The operating voltage is drawn from a DC bus 1, to which a load cell with a strain gauge (SG) 2 is connected. SG 2 is connected in the manner of a Wheatstone bridge. Current I through SG 2 is controlled by a power source 3. The resistance change ΔR in SG 2 due to expansion is proportional to elongation E with constant of proportionality k and the combined resistance R of the bridge:

$\begin{matrix} \begin{matrix} {\frac{\Delta \; R}{R} = \frac{\Delta \; U}{I \cdot R}} \\ {= {k \cdot ɛ}} \end{matrix} & (1) \end{matrix}$

Voltage ΔU in the zero branch of the bridge circuit is amplified by a factor A in differential amplifier 4 and digitised by means of an analogue/digital converter (ADC) 5. The same voltage reference 6 and 7 is used for ADC 5 and power source 3. Consequently, current I is determined by reference resistance R_(I) and voltage reference U_(ref).

$\begin{matrix} {I = \frac{U_{ref}}{R_{I}}} & (2) \end{matrix}$

Besides signal ΔU, which is modified by expansion, however, offset voltages U_(offset) are also amplified in differential amplifier 4 due to imbalances in differential amplifier 4 or for example caused by thermoelectric voltages at joints. Consequently, the input voltage at ADC 5 is given by the following:

U _(ADC) =A·(ΔU+U _(offset))  (3)

In turn, digitised value N at the output from ADC 5 thus results from:

$\begin{matrix} {N = {N_{\max} \cdot \frac{A \cdot \left( {{\Delta \; U} + U_{offset}} \right)}{U_{ref}}}} & (4) \end{matrix}$

In this context, N_(max) is the maximum output value from ADC 5 and U_(ref) is the reference voltage. Equations (1) and (2) yield:

$\begin{matrix} {N = {N_{\max} \cdot \frac{A \cdot \left( {{\frac{U_{ref}}{R_{I}}{R \cdot k}\; ɛ} + U_{offset}} \right)}{U_{ref}}}} & (5) \end{matrix}$

First voltage reference 6 may be substituted with a second voltage reference 7 by the use of switches. Thus, power source 3 may be operated according to equation (2) at two different operating points I₁ and I₂. The offset voltage can be calculated from two measurements N₁ and N₂, each with the first and second voltage references, by applying:

$\begin{matrix} {U_{offset} = {\frac{N_{1} - N_{2}}{A \cdot N_{\max}} \cdot \frac{U_{{ref},1} \cdot U_{{ref},2}}{U_{{ref},2} - U_{{ref},1}}}} & (6) \end{matrix}$

This returns elongation ε from these two measurements with:

$\begin{matrix} {ɛ = {\frac{R_{I}}{2 \cdot A \cdot N_{\max} \cdot R \cdot k}\left( {N_{1} + N_{2} - {\left\lbrack {N_{1} - N_{2}} \right\rbrack \cdot \frac{U_{{ref},1} + U_{{ref},2}}{U_{{ref},2} - U_{{ref},1}}}} \right)}} & (7) \end{matrix}$

The values of the reference voltages may be correlated via a factor B as follows:

U _(ref,2) =B·U _(ref,1)  (8)

In this way, equation (7) is simplified to:

$\begin{matrix} {ɛ = {\frac{R_{I}}{2 \cdot A \cdot N_{\max} \cdot R \cdot k}\left( {N_{1} + N_{2} + {\left\lbrack {N_{1} - N_{2}} \right\rbrack \cdot \frac{1 + B}{1 - B}}} \right)}} & (9) \end{matrix}$

By suitable selection of B, for example B=3/4, the expression may be further simplified to:

$\begin{matrix} {ɛ = {\frac{R_{I}}{2 \cdot A \cdot N_{\max} \cdot R \cdot k}\left( {{8 \cdot N_{1}} - {6 \cdot N_{2}}} \right)}} & (10) \end{matrix}$

The measured weight is obtained from the elongation via a calibration, so that the quotient in equation (10) may be replaced with a calibration factor. Accordingly, the operation and switch setting at voltage references 6, 7 may be carried out with a simple arithmetic logic unit 8 and displayed as required.

If non-precision differential amplifiers are used, the offset voltage may be significantly greater than the voltage in the zero branch of the bridge circuit. Accordingly, it may be necessary to select a substantially higher resolution for ADC 5 than the desired resolution of the scales would require. In an advantageous refinement of the invention, shown diagrammatically in FIG. 2, the offset voltage of differential amplifier 4 is also reduced with a carrier frequency process.

For this, the current is modulated in the direction of flow thereof through SG 2 with an H bridge consisting of electronic switches 9 a to 9 d. The AC voltage differential signal, of which the amplitude is modulated by the SG bridge deflection, is amplified in differential amplifier 4 and demodulated in a demodulator 10. Demodulation functions like a narrow band pass filter that only allows the excitation frequency to pass. This is then filtered out by a low pass filter 11, so that a DC voltage proportional to the SG deflection is present at the output. However, offset voltages in demodulator 10, ADC 5 or within power source 3 cannot be reduced in this way. These are reduced by varying the operating point of power source 3 and subsequent evaluation in arithmetic logic unit 8.

A simple microcontroller is well suited to creating the arithmetic logic unit 8. Even simple microcontrollers often include an ADC 5. However, such integrated analogue-to-digital converters usually do not have the resolution necessary for the application. It is usually possible to increase the resolution sufficiently at the expense of the measurement frequency with oversampling techniques. In most scales applications, the reduced measurement frequency is not an insurmountable problem.

In a modification of the invention, reference voltages 6 and 7 may also be applied directly to SG 2, as shown in FIG. 3. If multiple load cells are used, however, the respective SG 2 is connected in parallel. Here too, the offset voltage of differential amplifier 4 may also be reduced with a carrier frequency process, as described in the preceding. However, when the H bridge is activated (see FIG. 2) a dead time must be observed between the two states with different current directions through the SG 2 to ensure that, for example, switches 9 a and 9 c are not switched at the same time, which would result in an excessively high current flow in the bridge. Said excessively high current flow is prevented by power source 3 in the configuration according to FIG. 2. Said dead time between the two states causes asymmetries in demodulator 10.

The embodiments of the invention described in the preceding do not make direct used of the correlation between elongation 8 and the relative change in resistance AR/R described in equation (1). Instead, they require an ohmic behaviour of SG 2 and make use of the form ΔU/U derived via Ohm's law. For SG 2 with resistance wire, this hypothesis is certainly correct in the linear region of SG 2. Most SG 2 do not exhibit ohmic behaviour in thick film technology. The refinement of the invention refinement shown diagrammatically in FIG. 4 is based on the direct use of equation (1), in which the current through SG 2 is controlled by a power source 3, corresponding the respectively switched voltage reference 6 or 7, and the reference voltage for SG 5 is derived from the voltage drop over SG 2 by differential amplifier 12. In this way, the reference voltage from SG 5 is derived directly from the two operating points of SG 2 that are determined via the respective voltage reference. 

1. A device in which signals from load cells with strain gauges are evaluated, comprising: a load cell with one or more strain gauges for indicating, in the form of a voltage signal, a change in load on the load cell, at least one differential amplifier for amplifying the voltage signal from the load cell, an analogue/digital converter for converting the amplified signal into a digital signal, and an arithmetic logic unit for evaluation of the digital signal, wherein the one or more strain gauges (2) are operated at two different operating points that are determined by two voltage references (6, 7), and wherein the reference for the analogue/digital converter (5) is derived from the respective operating point.
 2. The device according to claim 1, wherein an amplifier derives the supply voltage for the strain gauges (2) linearly from the respective voltage reference, which also represents the reference for the analogue/digital converter (5).
 3. The device according to claim 1, wherein a power source (3) derives the current through the strain gauges (2) linearly from the respective voltage reference, which also represents the reference for the analogue/digital converter (5).
 4. The device according to claim 3, wherein the current through the strain gauge (2) is modulated in the flow direction thereof with an H bridge consisting of four electronic switches (9 a, 9 b, 9 c, 9 d), and the AC voltage differential signal of the strain gauge (2), of which the amplitude is modulated by the deflection, is amplified in the differential amplifier (4), demodulated in a demodulator (10), and filtered with a low-pass filter (11).
 5. The device according to claim 3, wherein the reference for the analogue/digital converter (5) is derived from the voltage drop over the strain gauges (2) by means of at least one differential amplifier (4).
 6. The device according to claim 3, wherein the amplified signals from multiple strain gauges (2) connected in series in the current path of power source (3) are added together with a summation amplifier, so that the aggregate signal is digitised in the analogue/digital converter (5).
 7. The device according to claim 1, wherein the arithmetic logic unit (8) is created with a microcontroller.
 8. The device according to claim 7, wherein the analogue/digital converter (5) is integrated in the microcontroller.
 9. A method for evaluating signals from load cells with strain gauges, comprising at least one differential amplifier, an analogue/digital converter, two voltage references, from which the reference for the ADC and the reference for the operating point of the strain gauges are derived in alternating sequence, and an arithmetic logic unit, the method comprising performing two consecutive measurements wherein the one or more strain gauges are operated at two different operating points, each of which is determined by one of the two voltage references, amplifying the voltage in the zero branch of the bridge circuit of the strain gauge with the differential amplifier and digitizing the voltage signal with the ADC, wherein the reference for the ADC is derived from the same voltage reference that also determined the set operating point of the strain gauge, and wherein the digitised offset and the initial value of the load cell is calculated from the two measurement values in the arithmetic logic unit.
 10. The device according to claim 1, wherein the digitised offset and the initial value of the load cell are calculated from the two measurement values in the arithmetic logic unit 